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Novel Treatment with Intraperitoneal MOC31PE Immunotoxin in Colorectal Peritoneal Metastasis: Results From the ImmunoPeCa Phase 1 Trial

Authors :
Kari Hauge Olsen
Stein Gunnar Larsen
Karl Erik Giercksky
Kjersti Flatmark
Lars Julsrud
Ida S. Frøysnes
Yvonne Andersson
Janne Merete Torset Øien
Øystein Fodstad
Svein Dueland
Ben Davidson
Source :
Annals of Surgical Oncology. 24:1916-1922
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

MOC31PE immunotoxin was developed to rapidly kill cells expressing the tumor-associated epithelial cell adhesion molecule, which is highly expressed in colorectal cancer. Although cytoreductive surgery (CRS) and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) may offer long-term survival to patients with peritoneal metastasis from colorectal cancer (PM-CRC), most patients experience disease relapse and novel therapeutic options are needed. On this basis, MOC31PE is being developed as a novel therapeutic principle to target PM-CRC.This was a dose-escalating phase I trial to evaluate the safety and toxicity (primary endpoint), pharmacokinetic profile, and neutralizing antibody response (secondary endpoints) upon intraperitoneal administration of MOC31PE in patients with PM-CRC undergoing CRS-HIPEC with Mitomycin C. Fifteen patients received the study drug at four dose levels (3+3+3+6), administered intraperitoneally as a single dose the day after CRS-HIPEC.No dose-limiting toxicity was observed, and the maximum tolerated dose was not reached. There was negligible systemic absorption of the study drug. Drug concentrations in peritoneal fluid samples were in the cytotoxic range and increased in a dose-dependent manner. MOC31PE recovered from peritoneal cavity retained its cytotoxic activity in cell-based assays. All patients developed neutralizing antibodies.Intraperitoneal administration of MOC31PE was safe and well tolerated, and combined with low systemic uptake, MOC31PE seems ideal for local intraperitoneal treatment. The drug will be further evaluated in an ongoing phase II expansion cohort.

Details

ISSN :
15344681 and 10689265
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Surgical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1e983f66f3f15b738635cc6a814b0b26